Archive for September, 2025

A French goodbye and a questioning hello

[This is my last post to LickHaven.com. I’m moving the ruminations to substack, so if/when you get to the end of this chapter of Jenny’s life, please subscribe to me there, if you can stand to read more.]

Customers have a sure knack for wanting what isn’t available or what they shouldn’t want in the first place: Congratulations to send to people they hate. Birthday cards for relatives so obscure they can’t identify the link. Ugly gift cards to match the ugly scarves received. Heliotrope tissue paper. Glossy red and blue sacks embossed with the British royal crest. 

Jenny will spend the rest of her days dropping greeting cards into paper bags with little ribbons flapping off the handles.

She’ll suspend one of the bags from her neck. Bag lady.

“I’d like a condolence card.” 

The man is thin, stringy, compressed by his out-of-date business suit.

“For someone in the family?”

“Yes, but…”

“?”

“It’s not a death or sickness. It’s a wedding.”

Jenny scratches the side of her nose.

“My brother is marrying the wrong woman.”

Snort. “I’m afraid we have nothing for misapplied affection.”

He points to a rack. “Isn’t there something that would be appropriate even if not exactly… you know?”

Jenny assumes her concentration face while concentrating on nothing in particular. “Perhaps if I knew the details?”

The man raises his right palm to his neck. “He’s marrying a floozy.”

“A prostitute, a female reprobate?”

“She isn’t his class. She hangs around in bars.”

Jenny elevates to her full five-foot-eight. “With your brother or without?”

“Both.”

“Then she’s making her own choice, and so is your brother. You want your brother to be better than he can be and see yourself as the keeper of his sullied purity. That’s pitiful. Perhaps you need a condolence for your own blinderedness.”

The man’s shockwave registers in an inner region he seldom visits. He backpedals, then turns toward the door. 

Jenny trails softly behind him. “Though perhaps I can offer a solution.”

“No! No, that’s… never mind.”

“Humor,” she says softly.

He stops. “You were making a joke?”

“Not at all. I’m suggesting you approach your unsettling situation with humor.”

“I don’t think it’s funny.”

“Of course not – it’s a clear case of tragedy. But, if you present it to your brother and his intended in the form of humor, they would hardly see it as an attack. They would enjoy a small external chuckle, while you – you would be laughing inside like a hyena.”

“I don’t see how…”

She touches his suited shoulder as softly as a fallen leaf. “Let’s look at the humorous condolence selections.”

She shows him several examples of sappy goo with unfunny side drivel to which, predictably, he has little reaction. Then…

“Now this one – the poor fellow is being swallowed by a crocodile. See the gentle sentiment expressed? ‘How did you get yourself into this? Hope you recover soon.’”

“Heh heh.”

“Browse for a bit. There are several more with a similar flavor.”  

Jenny moves to the register. Pam materializes by her left shoulder and leans in, lowering her brassy voice in attempted sotto voce. “I don’t know what you’re doing.”

“Selling cards to nitwits. It’s what I’m hired to do.”

“You almost chased that man out of the store.”

“Almost doesn’t grab the ring. Shush.”

Pam backs off as Mr. Condolence approaches with a fistful of cards, places them on the counter. 

“It’s hard to decide.”

“Let me see… Ha, you did pick the crocodile, I thought you would. This one’s quite good too. Not too sure about this” – she pushes a reject slightly to one side – “but either of these might do the trick, don’t you think? And… these others have a similar… outlook.”

“But which is the best? The most convincing, without… I mean, considering?”

“I couldn’t say. I don’t know your brother or” – leaning close – “his floozy. What I might suggest is that you buy these, all of them except that first outcaste, take them home and make your choice on reflection. It will be clearer in the proper setting.

“I could return the ones I don’t want – don’t choose, I mean?”

“You could, of course. But the others might come in handy later, don’t you think? You never know what opportunities might arise.”

“Well, heh heh, they might. Yes.”

Jenny bags the pile of six, swipes his credit card, extends an ingratiating smile. Mr. Condolence exits.

Pam stares into Chestnut St. “How do you do that?” 

“Stlange secret rurned in Olient. You know, you should fire me. If I were in your position, I’d fire me.”

“I don’t want to fire you. How can anyone be so goddam self-defeating?”

“Effort and dedication. And you can’t fire me because I quit.”

Pam deflates. “Really?”

“Long time coming. Maybe I can find something more useful to do in the world. Crochet doilies.” 

“Shit. OK. If that’s what you want. It had to happen. I can replace you, but it won’t be easy.”

A lightbulb flickers over Jenny’s head. “No, it won’t. Be easy.”

The women look at each other from an undefined distance, then the distance vaporizes and they merge in a hug. Pam writes out Jenny’s final check. Jenny picks up the few traces of her existence at French’s and leaves, determined never to return. Not even for a condolence card.

If I could

I surely would

Crap on the rock

Where Moses stood.

Pharaoh’s air force got grounded,

Oh Harry, don’t you weep.

So many jobs in so few years. She swept hallways in a tumbledown public school in North Philly. She typed reports for a lawyer with a bellow so voluminous his dictations stopped conversations two offices down the hall. She concocted grilled cheese sandwiches for hours on end in the last pressed-aluminum diner in the city’s Northeast. She inoculated the eyes of rabbits with a variety of brutal irritants for a cosmetic conglomerate. She cashed the checks of the down-and-out through a bulletproof window and charged them an exorbitant fee for the privilege. On the corner by Rittenhouse Square she hawked fliers for the ever-so-cleverly named Condom Nation. She shelved used books for a strange old man who seldom sold a volume. She called patients to remind them of dental appointments. 

Etc.

Few of these sojourns lasted more than a month or two, some a matter of days. French’s has been her mainstay for the past five years, because of Pam, who bullies and berates her with a peculiar acceptance, because Jenny has the absurd gift of convincing dolts that they should purchase overpriced stiff-paper celebrations for any occasion. And because Pam is an honest-to-god decent human being in a world of homogeneous assholes. 

What now?

“So many putrid things happen… in the world… I want to do something useful.” Jenny gestures to the woman whose Formica desk plaque reads “Maria Sanchez, Human Resources.” Which resources does she classify as human?

Maria Sanchez picks up the paper in front of her. “You have a good background, sales, excellent clerical skills it seems. Good grades, superb grades at Penn. You didn’t finish?”

“No.”

“May I ask why?”

“You may. I didn’t want to. Finish.”

“Well. We do have clerical openings that you certainly look qualified to fill. Once we check references.”

“Not that.”

“I’m… confused. What is it you’re looking for?”

“I’m looking for hospital work. Working with patients.”

“We have only a limited number of floor openings, you understand. They require training.”

“I can be trained.”

“I mean medical sciences education, previous experience in health care.”

Jenny waves her hands, chasing invisible flies. “Look, I was selling cards, providing stupid crap for stupid people. I don’t want to push more crap around. People get mashed, they get gargoyles dropped on them – gargoyles – and what do I do about it? You see?”

“I’m not sure –”

I’m in the world and the world doesn’t work and I don’t try to change it. The bad stays just as bad. I can empty bedpans. You dump somebody’s shit, it makes a little difference, or you… change their bandage, or. You just listen to them. What kind of training does that take, listening? Or somebody can train me. I learn fast. Every day, what do we amount to, you know what I mean?” Jenny slumps in the uncomfortable plastic chair. “I’m not articulate when I get excited.” She leans forward again. “Do something for me, OK, so I can do something for somebody else. That’s what I’m asking.”

Maria Sanchez smiles an infuriating (condescending?) smile and holds up Jenny’s slim resume. “You’d have to come in at the bottom, maybe below bedpans. In a sense.”

“You mean…?”

“I can’t guarantee anything, but I’ll see what I can do.”

“Jesus. Thank you.” 

Obsequious Jenny. Ha.

Outside, she wants to dance, get drunk and dance, or dance and get drunk. Ms. HR Sanchez acted like she wanted to help. Was it an act?

A pigeon craps on Jenny’s head.

Children hate school. Drunken men tumble down stairwells. Women call for help and the world disconnects. Shouldn’t it all work better? Alternate universes, multiverses, bubbles of new existence ballooning inside local reality, isolated realms adrift on their own rafts of alien physical law, a universe where oxygen’s stability disintegrates like a wind-blown puffball but good intentions boil up from the sea.

Are the building blocks of universes up for grabs? Grab them and celebrate.

substack: https://derekdavis1066.substack.com

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More stuff

Does Kristi Noem’s bizarre hatred of everybody not white maybe stem from her being banned from every Native American reservation while she was South Dakota governor? It must be a bit provoking not to be allowed to set foot on 12% of the state you supposedly run, on threat of being charged with trespassing.

*   *   *   *

As I’ve said many times, I see population control as the major long-range necessity to save the world from annihilation. (No comment here on whether saving the world from annihilation is a good or bad thing.) But I’m delighted to see that RFK Jr. is doing his best to help with population control. Once the U.S. federal government, under his thoughtful care, has dropped all vaccines and stopped all health research, we should see a rapid increase in childhood death, directly and indirectly leading to a decrease in our population.

The main loophole is that this will directly affect only the U.S. population, rather than assure a worldwide solution. I also think there may be more effective approaches to population control, such as cutting birth rates through family planning, so that kids born only to be eliminated later don’t get born in the first place. Might even be a tad kinder to families, should anyone be concerned with that.

*   *   *   *

The marching on of waste:

1. We recently received from Amazon a 9×14 in. non-recyclable plastic mailer which held a 2×3 in. item we ordered. This comes to roughly 1.7 sq. ft. of  excess waste plastic, if you consider both sides of the envelope.

2. I recently bought a new iMac, with a 24 in. screen. The sheer amount of cardboard in the internal packing was bad enough, but the way it was wangled together beggared belief.

There were 8 or 10 individual miniature “boxes” constructed of interlocking parts that made no rational sense. Time and money was spent putting low-level designers to work to assemble the most complicated possible ways to intertwine elements of cardboarded forms that would defy Escher. It seemed pretty clear that stuffing folded paper between the computer’s parts would achieve the same thing with less weight, design cost, and bulk to dispose of. 

Or maybe they hired the 7 dwarfs: Skanky, Bumwad, Dingle, Limpdick, Nosewipe, Dimbulb and Rumpledforeskin.

3. And just in time – right in the middle of writing that last sentence – Linda returned with the mail, which included a free drink holder from Recover Red, a red-light therapy outfit be bought from. It was a “customer appreciation” item we neither ordered or wanted. It’s stainless steel, weighs over 12 ounces, holds 30 fl. ounces of “coffee tea water” (beer, not being considered a Good Thing, is not also recommended).

It’s 9 1/2 inches tall, comes with a 10 1/2 inch straw, and is slightly larger around than is comfortable to hold. The top features a bizarrely complicated opening mechanism that we have yet to figure out. From the included note, printed on a small plastic sheet, it seems to have been sent to help ensure a 5-star rating of the company’s product.

Feh!

*   *   *   *

Time travel is not possible because time is not a thing to be traversed, it is a record, an unfolding. It cannot be viewed in its extension, like the 3 dimensions of space. Time does not cause, it is a fixed record that cannot be gone back to or changed.

Einstein and others did us a disservice by melding “spacetime” as a term that makes 4 dimensions sound all equal in type and extent. 

Nowadays, string theorists posit 10 or 11 dimensions, the extras curled up in little balls like pill bugs. Watch it when you’re out in the garden that you don’t step on a dimension and fuck up the universe.

*   *   *   *

Daughter Cait, at her Twin Wolves Healing Arts center, is promoting “natural oral health,” which sounds like a really excellent idea. Unfortunately, it reminds me of my personal, peculiar response to almost anything having to do with my mouth – total revulsion.

From the first time I held a toothbrush, I hated brushing my teeth. Toothpaste made me feel that I was brushing with pure spit. That feeling has never changed. I haven’t used toothpaste in at least 3 decades. I don’t floss either, because the mere sight of floss makes me gag (even unused, but used, it hits me like an assault).

There are minor exceptions: As a kid, I almost liked tooth powder, which may be a worthwhile substance today, but back then had mint-flavored abrasive inclusions like ground lava, which can’t be all that good for you. I only used it at my grandmother’s, we never had it at home.

I pay the price today. I’ve lost at least half my teeth, though I chew relatively well thanks to the occasional crown or replacement. I do have a tendency to bite myself 3 or 4 times per meal, which just makes me more pissed at my mouth.

I’m sure I’ll be hit with the psych certainty that this results from some horrendous childhood trauma. Believe it, it doesn’t. It’s innate. And I can’t think of a more disgusting job than being a dental tech.

*   *   *   *

One of the chemicals that Linda uses in her glaze-making is gerstley borate. It is, she says, a “melter,” which sounds… unsettling. So my next character will be: 

Gerstley Borate, Deadly Man of Intrigue.

*   *   *   *

Now, if for some ungodly reason you’ve read this far, I have a question for you.

I’ve deliberately shied from starting a blog, perhaps because the word sounds like a form of nasal impaction, but I’m wondering – should I move my ruminations online, to an outfit like Substack or Patreon?

I do currently post them to Linda’s and my website, where we have exactly 6 followers. If I did transfer to online, all of you would still enjoy them [snicker, rattle, GUFFAW] delivered to your email, but I might be able to pick up another 6 followers who tripped over me while searching for John Derrick, the Scottish hangman. And I wouldn’t be looking for money; you could still read it for free, and I don’t need what pittance might otherwise roll in.

If you think this is an even minimally good idea, would you choose Patreon or Substack as the more worthwhile?

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It never had a title

[What is this, and why am I beleaguering you with anything of such length? 

[It is the opening chapter of what was planned to be my first and perhaps only novel, back in the mid 1960s. The attempt soon degenerated into confusing shit, but bits and pieces still live to haunt me. Some of those were stitched together as the Rylla profiles I plugged in here some months back. 

[Well, see what you think of this, and tell me if you’d like to read some of those other bits, or whether you printed it out to wrap your celery so it wouldn’t stick to the fridge shelf.]

Though young, Roswald had the aspect of a much older man. He took steps short and precise, each a small excursion forward and to the side, out, around and back again, into himself. Worse for him, he knew this and would go on periodic bouts of upheaval, trying to force his soul into some new form which might give his life direction and dimension. He wished, on some level, to be mighty-spirited, to leap the chasm which separates man from man, logic  from emotion, science from art, religion from common sense. He would alter his restrictive gait every six months or so, going into long, loping strides of bouncy, pogo-stick motions, only to find that at the end of three or four weeks he had returned to the out-around-back of his closed circle. His feet, he came to realize, knew the Truth and the Way, and it was a way of sorrow.

The day of his realization was, in a sense, a beginning for him, but a beginning steeped in a corrosive sadness which spread upwards through his legs, spleen and shallow-breathing lungs, arriving at last in the church pew of his consciousness, where it settled in for what promised to be a lifelong sermon on the errors of his ways.

His place in life reflected the melding of his inner place and his inflated aspirations with remarkable fidelity. He was an messenger boy of high governmental order, a go-between who, on a practical level, did bridge gaps (through hand-delivered communications), but who nevertheless need not show external evidence of a personal existence and must not, as a function of his position, have either a point of view of the ability to exert an influence over others.

Indeed, it was almost an anomaly that he was a human being at all–partly a matter of convenience to those who used him, partly a matter of not trusting those channels of communication which can be bugged, partly an anachronistic attachment to the Old Ways. He could, had his utilizes known the full spectrum of 1963 technology, have been replaced by any of three virtually bug-proof systems which had been introduced during the past five years. 

Now here is the strange thing: Roswald did get bugged, possibly the first human being to be fully wired for espionage purposes without his knowledge. The buggers chose him because they understood enough of psychology to realize that Roswald would be given to a streak of undeveloped hypochondria which could easily be primed to explode into full-blown hysterical symptoms.

As their emissary, they chose an outgoing, pleasant sort named Gerald Kloan, who befriended Roswald during the latter’s visits to Philadelphia to smooth the flow of information between GE Aerospace and the National Science Foundation (who, if anyone, should have known of more reliable communications systems but did not). Since Kloan was a junior exec with GE, it was natural that he should strike up the sort of amorphous friendship which leads to luncheon dates. At one of these luncheons, Kloan had a stroke of good fortune which set the operation in motion.

The seafood lunchroom was crowded with diverse sorts arranged around communal wood trestle tables, and the walls were decorated with row on row of oyster places and similar fishy implements. Roswald bit down on a small stone hiding somewhere in his oyster. The ensuing pain gave him a rare moment of clarity, raising him out of himself long enough to wonder why he had agreed to eat lunch with Kloan and why he had agreed to eat raw oysters, which he equated with swallowing someone else’s tongue.

Why had fate placed him here, now, why had his circular steps paced him into this strange corner to be assaulted by the deep? He felt a mild elation that somehow the sea hated him, that a whole bast body of water knew of his existence and took issue with it. But as the pain ebbed, the illusion of saline importance receded like a polluted tide, and Roswald was left only a diner with a sore molar.

Kloan clucked the usual friendly commiseration, then settled into an uncharacteristic posture of silence, flicking occasional worried glances across the table. It took several minutes for this ploy to register with Roswald, who had retreated once more to his insularity. Once he had noticed, it took a like period for his companion’s behavior to take on meaning.

“What is it?”

“What’s what, Rossie?” Kloan’s choice of this nickname was neat as a surgeon’s incision, dropping formality yet refraining from trespassing on the private property of Roswald’s given name.

“You keep looking at me like something is wrong.”

“Well. . . I don’t think anything is wrong.” He jabbed another oyster to underscore his provisional certainty.

“What could be wrong?” Roswald was annoyed, unused to attention and personally directed hypotheses.

“How’s your tooth?”

“Fine. It hurts. I must have hit a filling.”

“It doesn’t feel . . . strange?” Kloan poised an oyster before his mouth like an omen.

“No . . . just sore. What do you mean, exactly?”

“Nothing much, I guess. I just have kind of brittle teeth. See this back here”–he opened his mouth and pointed into the shadowed cavern which released no secrets in the dim light of the restaurant– “I bit down on a stone or something once and three days later a whole damn cusp came off. I must have gone back to the dentist six or eight times. Kept losing little pieces until he had to cap it. But I think it’s just brittle teeth with me.”

“I didn’t know you could have brittle teeth.” Roswald had stopped chewing, conscious of how he was avoiding the right side of his jaw.

“That’s just what they call it. maybe it’s the same with everybody.” Kloan looked quickly apologetic for the slip. “I mean, I don’t think your teeth are going to fall apart or anything. Your teeth look very sound.” He chewed vigorously for emphasis.

Roswald explored the aggrieved tooth with tentative tongue, checking all the familiar slips and fissures for evidence of a fresh fault. He found none, but the look on Kloan’s face was plain — at any moment the dental façade of that molar might be rent asunder, to lie on the highway of his tongue as so many slivers of devastated bone.

By the end of the meal, Kloan had given him the name of a little-known but trusted dentist who could ferret out the most minute discrepancy in the sturdiest of teeth.

Three weeks later, Roswald was knocked out with a general anesthetic. The entire inside of his molar was removed and replaced with temporary packing. Two more trips, and Roswald was the possessor of an ingenious miniature microphone based on bone-induction, much like a high-quality hearing aid, but destined to lead to other ears than his.

The installation of a sufficiently accurate transmitter stretched Kloan’s limited manipulative abilities to their utmost, but soon Roswald was relieved to know that his heart, rated weak and erratic on the EKG of a Washington specialist recommended by Kloan, was pumping right along under the direction of the latest in atomic-powered pacemakers. And indeed, the apparatus he carried would have passed muster for the genuine article under the most careful scrutiny (short of slitting Roswald like a hog).

The physical effects of these intrusions on Roswald were nil, but the influence they came to have on his mind was odd and (in all fairness to the someone directing Kloan) unpredictable. The sermon in his head was not so much one of words but of a pointing finger, directed, more often than not, at his never-changing circular pace.

Lately, however, it pointed as frequently to the ignominious mechanism delivering rhythmic pulses (or so he thought) to his heart. The finger ticked back and form between the realms, bringing them to a common focus until Roswald had come to equate the two. After a time he even became aware of the heartbeat itself, a living repetition which tided him over from one second to the next. It began as an echo or an overtone, but in time it thumped more and more to the forefront of his consciousness, until it came to dominate his external being.

He strolled along in time to the call of his ventricles, his pace varying with the degree of tension he felt, but on the whole slowing and lengthening in just the manner he had tried unsuccessfully to promulgate over the years. Soon the heart and the feet became opposing metronomes, a simply but efficient feedback mechanism which promoted the well-being of his body in their stately progression. His blood pressure dropped slightly, the nagging pains disappeared from his calves and he no longer had headaches. Even the sadness itself, which had enveloped him in layers of protective insulation, lightened to a sense of mild disquiet and, finally, to something approaching ease.

Roswald barely noticed this at first, for he had become so consumed with the rhythm that its side-effects were but a blur in the corner of his mind’s eye. But his superiors (and everyone he dealt with was his superior in bureaucratic power) did notice — at first with amusement, later with chagrin, then with vague suspicion. One’s instrument does not take on a personality without becoming a source of concern. So it was that, while Roswald remained ignorant of his status as a broadcast station, he nonetheless managed to draw down on himself precisely the sort of unfocused distrust that Kloan and his cohorts had congratulated themselves on having bypassed.

“I don’t understand it,” groused Swivel, a long-faced engineer with a preposterous cowlick. “The guy’s supposed to be a complete potato. He’s never done anything in his life that would draw attention. I don’t think he’s even capable of falling down in a public place. Now they’re sniffing all over him. Why?”

“Are you sure there’s noting in that broadcast pack that could alert them?” Kloan asked. “A power leak or something?”

“Not a damn thing. The transmission is so weak I have to use three boosters to get it up to half-decent. Even then you have to know where to listen for it and you have to be able to unscramble the signal before you know there’s anything to listen to. If they were that far along they’d have him ripped wide open. No, they’re reacting to him.”

Swivel was playing with a transistor. He was almost always playing with a transistor. His whole posture was in the “aw shucks” tradition of American invention, from the cowlick to the holes in his shoes to the nonchalance with which he scraped dirt from beneath his nails. Kloan might have thought to dislike him intensely if he hadn’t been too busy keeping his best face turned outward at all times, like the moon circling the earth.

The cumulative effects of such chronic dishonesty often lead to physical manifestations, even in the most amoral of us. With Kloan it was button-twisting. At the moment he was worrying the last button from the cuff of his left jacket sleeve, and it would soon join the others in a plastic snuggle in his breast pocket. Half his lunch hours were consumed in trips to the tailor, who harbored the notion that Kloan was somehow involved with monkeys. But in truth he was involved only with Getting Ahead, a process that requires a great deal of motion on one’s personal periphery, because the center of being is not consulted.

Roswald, meanwhile, was moving closer to the center of his being, a place he had carefully avoided for fear it might prove untenanted. He now viewed everything in relation to the new rhythm and a new sense of meaningfulness forming inside. For the first time, he saw the possibility that he might be part of some larger mechanism, the outlines of which were hazy but beginning to take, if not shape, at least extension.

Roswald the cog, the unit, was becoming part of the world.

It must be, he thought, because he was so near Death that Life had become so important to him (revelations tend to present themselves in simplistic terms). Not only had gracefulness slipped into his motions, but he also found that he could turn his mind to a multitude of subjects with increasing facility. The images of dampness and rot began to fade, Spanish moss on longer hung just behind his eyes. There remained a giant step between himself and gladness, but as his stride grew longer, that internal step grew shorter. He wished fervently, for the first time in his existence, that that existence might be prolonged indefinitely. He did not want to be defective. He did not want to die.

He decided that pacemakers, as trustworthy as they were reputed to be, might not be the ultimate in security for him. He would rather trade a chronic treatment for health, so he made his way to a cardiologist all his own choice who told him that his heart was as sound as a dollar. Others, in further consultation, agreed.

Roswald was elated but puzzled. How could the original diagnosis, the consensus of technology and medical expertise, have gone so awry? He confronted the installer of his pacemaker and observed an inexplicable confusion and blustering, underlaid by what looked to a layman’s eye like panic. Why so much fuss over a botched diagnosis? It seemed to go beyond fear of being sued.

He left the office scratching idly at his memory for fleas of the past and recalled odd scenes and table talk, most of it centered on the boyish earnestness of Kloan. An image came to him of the Assaulting Oyster and, in a flash of insight that would have been impossible for the Roswald of a few months before, he realized that he had been had.

As a loyal servant, he turned in his body as evidence. On November 21, 1963, he was poked, prodded, sliced, sewed and relieved of one molar. His superiors — some so superior that he had never before seen their faces — rushed in individually and in packs to congratulate him on his acumen, his patriotism and his fine teeth. He received an immediate promotion, indicating that they could no longer put trust in their loyal servant to carry messengers when, for all they knew, his very shit might be wired for sound. Nor, based on his past performance, could they think of much of anything else that he could do.

He was given an office, a title, a secretary, and left to wait for any mail that might be routed his way in error. The hours were long and, in those days following Kennedy’s assassination, particularly empty. For that brief period the government behaved as a person, sad and waiting.

It was the perfect time and place for Roswald’s incubation, for he too, no longer sad, was also waiting. It was one of those rare times when something new can begin or something old increase in tempo and be driven to a merciless conclusion.

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